THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGF THREJ~ _~OM1O j "RIVER BOSS" LOOKS OVER STREAM CUTTING FORESTS!HAVR ALUMNI NO__O_______ AFFECTS FLOODS MOURN YALE WIN' W\ASHINGTON, Nov. 21.-Denuding Consoling ~heinselves b)0th oer tie' PIIBLIS lES BOO KLIS, ~i 4,. 1of the nation's frests wvas ivent s an oss that harvard suffered at..the 1 t Histories Andti1Uses (OfEleeiriitv And (Cas Are Narrated lit Two Pa1 i 'i llets NOW IN SECOND EDITION Two pamphlets, one titled 'Manufac- tured Gas" and the other "Electricity," have been published b~y the Informa- tion bureau of the Michigan Public Utility Information committee andl are being furnished on request to appli- cants. Thus far, the two pamphlets which portray the beginnings, processes of' development and present achievements of the two chief public utilities have been used to the greatest extent in high school class rooms, particularly those of civics, physics, chemistry and economics. They were also preparedl for use by English classes and have been utilized -extensively by teachers in state high schools. A first edition of 10,000 of each was quickly used up and now a section edition of even more is being pub-1 lshed to meet the demand. Written by experts who are fully (qualified to give the best accounts, each takes on the value of a supplement to the text book as it not only offers those things -which the text offers but it also makes the subject practical andl brings it up to the last minute in development. The story told in the pamphlet "Man- ufactured Gas" goes back to an ex- planation of theof unction of gas com- panies as the first utilities, explains that they are not competitors of elec- tric companies and then goes into a story of gas, or "the modIern fuel" as it is termed. In a similar manner, the pamphlet on electricity tells its history. Both pamphlets explain many of theI MOTe common problems that confrontI people in daily life as they are ef- fected by public utilities. r HARVARD-In the will of the late Lady Henry~, of~ London, a fund for the establisliment of scholarships at Oxford for American students and at Harvard and Yale for British stu- dents is provide.d. ___THE RAE - I fTUESAYWEDNESPAYI Buck JonesI important cause of the floods in the Iands of Yalo in Saturday's foot ball MAississippi Valley and New Englandj gamie, and also t heir iiiabilitv to at- bv Charles Lathrop Pack, president of tend it, the Harvard Club of Michi- lthe American Tree Association, in a 2gan celeb~rat ed at a dinner S'aturday relnort presentedl to the house floodl night in the Union, after witnessing control committee recently. ,tlheCMinnesota' gam,.e in the an ernool). '"The floods have turned the atten- Dr. IHugh E. Cabot, dean of tee tion of the nation to the need of re-! School of Medicine, acting as toast-. foresting the millions of idle acres at1 master, led the fC'stivities of tho the headwaters of the streams that dinner, which is an annual affair for find their way to the Mississippi river,"I these H arvard graftuates whio cannot' he said, !attend the Yale-Harvard game. . Y NOW SHOWING 1 1 UNITED ARTISTS PICTU E Representat ives S. Wallace I~kempscy, c, N o li'I oi airmnan of thce house comnmittee on rivers andi harbiors, right eat(Q nd Congressman .ohn k lMlcDu''"ie, of Mobile, Ala., directly behind l)e i;t ey, "resen inspecting i5 111 miles of "Texas waterways, witli 8eaumnont , Tex,tIie-~e aboardl a priv- ate yacht on the Neches river. Dempsey 11' :i'. .4 ". . A11. .w . J. ./ 'w a .. Is the LAST Senior Sittings. DAY for If you can- not come at once, make your appointment now- while time is available. I II 11 * 1wniair I~salay' eince by- cr e u Iatteti~9 toth wshbl grC I "The Whisperin' Sage" TIIIRSI)AY-FRIDAY Laura LalPlante Give Pictures for Christmas T his Year I "The Love Thrill"I RAE___ Pv MFoever I IF I. i Ili I J ir' ipO ' j el. Perfect onlywiththebest of F 1aur sevce The dry wrk0 Isaways comfort 1 I I 11 4219 I It costs a lot, but Ca mm-us- tvche best IT I3 true that Carrel is the quality ciga- rette, but it costs to make it so. To nakre Camel the favorite that it is costs the choicest 'crops of Turkish arnd Domestic tobaccos grown. It requires the expense of modern re:. r3 ea vcrealization of cx- cc IC'°ce. They are ;', .x s 7 eanF dastidious5 You r t as te will 't itself in thtese choice tobaccos. Came-L, t t.eierthe more 1 - Q ATA THE/ j,-r UNDRy Co. 11 1111 RH